By Bay City News Service — Two recent deaths in Marin County have been linked to the flu and another two in Santa Cruz County are suspected of being flu-related, public health officials said Wednesday.
A 63-year-old man with significant chronic medical conditions died
on Dec. 27, and a previously healthy 48-year-old woman died of an
influenza-related complication on Jan. 6, Marin County Public Health Officer
Dr. Matt Willis said.
Both were hospitalized in intensive care, and neither had received
a flu vaccine, Willis said.
Six other flu patients, most of them young or middle-aged adults,
have been hospitalized in the county, Willis said.
(Read more in the Marin County blog here.)
There were also two suspected influenza-related deaths within the
last two weeks in Santa Cruz County, a spokeswoman from that county's Public
Health Department said. Both people were under age 65 and lab tests have not
yet confirmed that the deaths are flu-related, the spokeswoman said. A 48-year-old Contra Costa woman's death was also flu-related and a 41-year-old Santa Clara woman's death right before Christmas was attributed to the illness.
The predominant influenza virus nationally and in Marin County in
the 2013-14 flu season is A H1N1, the same virus that caused the 2009-10 H1N1 pandemic, according to the Marin County Public Health Department.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials said the H1N1
virus continues to circulate widely, and illnesses are disproportionately
affecting young and middle-age adults.
Public health officials are urging residents to get a flu shot if
they haven't already. (Click here to find a flu shot provider nearest you.) This year's vaccine protects against H1N1 and other
influenza strains.
Here's a list of flu symptoms.
Other preventive measures include covering the mouth and nose when
coughing or sneezing, using tissues and discarding them in a trash
receptacle, scrubbing hands often with soap and water, using alcohol-based
hand cleaners, and staying home from work or school if you have flu-like
symptoms.
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